The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 27, 1917, Page 6

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BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE FRIDAY, JULY 27, 1917 SCOOP THE CUB REPORTER BASEBALL SCORES OHSS POOO OS AMERICAN ASSOOI OOFO9 999 OO Club— Indianapolis .. Kansas City . St.Paul .. Louisville . Columbus Minneapo! Toledo . Milwaukee GAMES THURSDAY. St. Paul, 6; Columbus, 5. Minneapolis, 3; Louisville, (Milwaukee, 2; ‘Indianapolis, 1. Kansas City, 5; Toledo, 2. 2. GAMES’ TODAY. Columbus at St. Paul. Toledo at Kansas City. Louisville ait: Minneapolis. Indianap .is at Milwaukee. OOP PEE EEE EHO OD ° NATIONAL LEAGUE. ° CH HOHOHHHHSEOHH OSG! Club— W. L. Pet. New York .. 53. 28 Cincinnati .. 3 St. Louis . 40 551 Philadelphia 39, 519 Chicago 46 495 Brooklyn. . 44 ATO Boston . 46.870 Pittsburgh .. 59314 GAMBS THURSDAY. Brooklyn at Pittsburgh. First game— Club— Pittsburgh .. Brooklyn ... Batteries for Pittsburgh—Carlson and Fischer, Brooklyn at Pittsburgh. Second game— Club— RHE i Pittsburgh sees L 80 Byookyi” : 10 2 Batteries—Jacobs and Schmidt; Ca- dore and Wheat. Philadelphia at Cincinnati. Club— R. Cincinnati .. Philadelphia Batteries—Schneider and Clarke, Wingo; Rixie, Oescher, Fitterey and Burns. Boston at St. Louis. Club— R.H.E. St. Louis . 241 Boston . 02 0 Batteries — Doke and Gonzales; Barnes and Tragesser. New York at Chicago. Club— Chicago .. New York Batteries—Vaughn Tesreau and Rariden. weer goat te. and Diinoeter; GAMES TODAY. Boston at St. Louis. Brooklyn at Pittsburgh. New York at Chicago. Philadelphia at Cincinnati 60060900 00000008 @ AMERICAN LEAGUE. | ¢ 0659900 00500008 Club— Ww. Chicago 5 Boston . Cleveland Detroit New Yor Abd Philadel phi AMT Washington All St. Louis .. 863 GAMBS THURSDAY. St. Louis at Boston. First game— Club— Boston . St. Louis . Batteries—Puth and Agnew; Koob, Martin and Hale. St. Louis at Boston. Second game— ‘480 | implicitly,” COLLINS By PAUL PURMAN. For two years there has been a feel- ing in baseball circles ihat so long as the Red Sox machine held together and played the same. kind of baseball as it showed in 1915 and 1916 no club on teh circuit would be able to beat it. Two reasons have been given for this, both of which are sound baseball axioms. (1) The Red: Sox have.been alile ta )| beat teams they. had to beat to win. (2) The Red Sox have been able to play for one ran and hold it. The first is an attribute of only such a team asthe’ ftéd Sox, a club composed, of money players who can face the’‘most crucial tests without wavering‘ind play better baseball un- der a’strain than their opponents. Wast season this was evidenced in the last series with the Tigers, a se- ries' that meant the pennant to the club that won. The Tigers broke un- der the strain and the Sox went on .| into the world series. ond is based on mechanical ith wonderful pitching and air ‘ight fielding, such as Boston has had for two seasons, a one-run lead is equal to a much larger advantage for some other club, The best reason for believing that the White Sox and not the Red Sox will be on the top of the heap at the end of this son is that these rules are not holding out this year. The Red Sox went into one of the It’s A Life-saver System With Scoop SOME. Bo0B TIPPED His CANOE SAY LUTTE +O KNOW BETTER TH é& Bl & GAL LIKE | SHES T0d ake trre ine OUGHT TO TAKE ee OUT IN THEYRE OVER WO TAKE —TOO FATTO. . SINKC- ANE NOUFIP WHY TYST SIT. ON "EM er OPES, By ‘Hop’ TUST TH KIND crucial series of the season in their last meeting with the White Sox at Chicago. It was the Red Sox and not the White Sox that cracked under the strain. After Ruth had won the first game Rowlanad’s outfit came back and took the second, fought the Bostonese off their feet in a 15-inning tie in the third and won the fourth and fifth, going out in the lead with a margin of four and one-half games. Another thing—a one-run tead will not work against the White Sox. There's hitting at all nine stations of that lineup and its dangerous hitting, as Boston pitchers will attest to. And one thing thoré—the White Sox have just struck their stride. Collins and Jackson have just begun , to bat up to thefr usual standard; “Schalk, out of the ‘game for several weeks on account of injuries, i: kK, and the White Sox with Schalk is an entirely different club than the White Sox without Schalk. The development of Riberg at short, permitting Weaver to play third and the solving of Chicago’s first base problem with Gandil has built up an ‘infield around Collins that is almost as great as any in recent baseball. The Sox pitching is good and has been improving. Look out for the Sox, they're not likely to bust on the stretch. The word comes from Pittsburgh | Pranl Hugo Bezdek, newest of mana- 's, is to succeed because Bezdek is “natural leader of men.” Natural leaders of men are rare, to say the least, and such a statement coming at this time may be prema- ture. “The men follow ge a Bezdek's ord for the Pirates. But this statement is also open to criticism. News dispatches recently told of the suspension of Al Mamaux for breaking training rules. If Bezdek’s orders were being car- ried out it is certain this wouldn't the infractions of Mamaux were seri- ous, for pitchers with the latent abil- of Mamaux are not suspended for ialities. Scanning the records for several years you find only a few managers tri can be called natural leaders of men. a the article goes on to say | —which, if true, means a great deal| Hughie Jennings, BEZDEK, NATURAL LEADER? WELL WATCH THE PIRATES IF AE 1 ank Chance is one of them. weaker man than Chance could iat have handled.the Cubs of a decade ago. But Chance could not make managers out of his own men—wit- ness the failure, of Tinker. Connie Mack is a natural leader and a strict disciplinarian. John McGraw is a nat- ural leader. None but a natural lead- er could handle the bunch of tempera- ment on his ball club. Fred Clarke, per- haps Moran and Huggins, and certain- ly, in view of his work this year, ¢ isty Mathewson are natural lead- ers. That about lets them out. Another glance over the records shows the great stars of the game who have tried and failed, just be- .| have happened and it is evident thaticause they were net natural leaders. There's Tinker, already mentioned, Hal Chase, Lajoie, Stovall and Harry Davis, Bob Wallace, Roger Peckin- | paugh, Norman Elberfeld and others. Maybe Bezdek has it—if so watch out for the Pirates in 1918. A natural who, in the narrow sense of the term, {leader can go about where he wants to with his ball club. Cleveland Batteries— Dumont. smith; Bagby and Billin| Cleveland at Washington. Second game— Club— Washington Cleveland .. Batterie Klepfer and DeBar 1,-3.4 s : and Ain- Chicago at New York. “chub— New York Chicago .. Fourteen innings. and Schalk; Cullop, maker and Walters. Shawkey, Nuna- Club— R.H.E. Boston 814 0 St. Loui -3 8 0 Batteries— er and Agnew; So- thoron, Rogers and Severeid. Detroit at Philadelphia. First game— Club— R.H.E. Philadelphia . 27 2 Detroit . 26. 87 Batteries and Haley; James and Stanage. Detroit at Philadelphia. Second game— Club— R.H.E. Philadelphia . uf U4 Detroit ... -2 8 1 Batteries—Noyes, Busch and Mey- ers; Mitchell and Stanage. Cleveland at Washington. First game— Club— R.H.E. ‘Washington ................ 2 5 3 GAMES TODAY. Chicago at New York. Ratteries—Benz, Danforth, Williams| St. Louis at Boston. Detroit at Philadelphia. Cleveland at Washington. OR About the best players with the Giants seem to be the Boston Braves and the Brooklyn Dodgers. They didn’t kill anyone at the auto at Omaha the other day. Must have deen mighty disappointing. Now that Stallings has signed Ed Walsh, maybe he can get Johnny Kling to catch him. It’s queer the Reds can go right on Bill Carrigan, + winning even when they’re in first division. Cincinnati has butted into the first division. | The Reds must feel about as natural as a rassler at a Browning club meeting. Hugo Cezdek will find managing a Pittsburg baseball club under Barney Dreyfuss a much more serious job than smashing through the Minnesota line. | A bloomer girl team is touring the country. We though they went out of style about the same time» as ac- cordians and tintypes. By the number of games they are losing they still seem to ve bloomers. The Three-Eye league has disband- ed. Connie Mack ought to be able to get a ball’club now. Ty Cobb can’t seem to hold up the Tigers alone. Unless he tries'a hand at pitching, perhaps. Jess Willard is more interested in the round ring than the square one, just now. t Jimmy Callahan +would sentence the kaiser to manage the Pirates un- der present ownership. But Wilhelm would want to be. umpire too, and President Tener couldn’t! stand for that. The “Three Eye” the 'y players have been released just in time to be drafted. But it’s unfair. The umpires got jobs in other leagues before they had time to look around. The French have a way of stopping lmules from hee-hawing. Umpires ; would like to use it on some man- ‘agers and players. George Burns got $50 for hitting the bull. He’s more successful than a lot of guys who try to throw it. Picketing the white house seems to be about as successful as arguing with the umps. Proceeds from an Indianapolis auto- mobile race are to be given to the American ambulance section. With the understanding perhaps that the ambulances are to be used at auto speedways after the war. Umpires probably would like to have close decisions included in peace terms. Connie Mack opines he will have a winning team in 1918. Last year he spined he would have a winning team in 1917. —— Tribune want ads bring results. FIRST BASEBALL PLAYER TO ENLIST IN ARMY. Taschall fans will never forget F (flenk) Gowdy. The tall blond catch: er of the Boston Braves has made ‘his nune among pro: ional ball players by no act on the diamond, although he is known by reputation wherever our national gaine is played, Cowdy is the first player among the hundreds eligible for national service in the major league who has enlisted, By thus coming to the front voluntary act he not only true Amer nisnt which reflec credit) upon him personally, but also that of his profession. But he also.has done an aet.that undoubtedly Ate be eniclnt by others of the protde chi diamond, Cowdy is no ordinary ball aver: Neither is he of ordinary mold. He is a recognized leader among those of his sion; a@ man with character and. is a man who would have heen suc sful in most any voca- tion that he might have selected, had not his skill as a ball ple made him one of the best catchers in the wae WOULD CHANGE GERMAN NAME Nick Altrock Asks Court to Permit Him to Call Himself MacAltrock Can't Take Chances, Nicholas Altrock is a ball player who can trace his ancestors back to the land of the kalser, He is a regu Tar German, but thus far has kept it a secret. Now that there is a mix-up between this country and Germany, however, Nicholas has taken it upon hiv\self to be prepared and maintaia y on ey, Nick Altrock. an attitude of the strictest neutrality. Le did not enlist for that would inter- fere with his ball playing. Instead, he wandered into court in Washing- ton recently and asked that his name be changed to “MacAltrock.” Nick be- lieves the little dash of Scotch will deceive the dear old public and save him from many unpleasant moments on the ball field, “Yes, that’s straight ebout changing my. name,”, “T can’t take enn hie oldest of the baseball organizations, For five years he has been;the main- stay of the Braves.back of the bat, and his work always has been conscientious and marked by a-degréee of skill that marked him a leader of those playing his position. He came into: unusual prominence ‘in the world’s series be- tween Boston and the Athletics in the fall of 1914, when the Braves were the first to win the championship title by taking four straight games. towdy was the:batting hero of the series, He also cnught all the’ games for Boston, and his all-round playing us a catcher was never more brilliant in: his~career than in’ these? games, \ > Standing more than six feet, weifhing close to 190 pounds, of fine intelligéit face, with a shock of waving blond haiy, he always has been a conspicuous figure on the professional diamond. Gowdy sacrifices a salary of $6,000 as a ball player to serve his country in the humble capacity of a private in the Ohio National Guard. All honor and glory to Gowdy, any Chances these days, and if the fans Vertics and in case of your failure don’t take kindly to that ‘Mac’ stuff, I am prepared to carry it further, As a last resort I shall go into court and have my front name changed to Mis chael. How would Michael MacAlt- wack sound?” SUMMONS. State of North Dakota, County of Burleigh. In district court, Sixth ju- dicial district. C. B. Little and Minnie N. Neff, Plaintiffs Burleigh Wood and Mr. Wood, her husband; Blanche Parker and George Parker, her husband; Kittie Van Etten, Merlen Van Etten and Hughes Van Etten, the heirs of Georgiana Van Etten, deceased, and the unknown heirs of Van Etten, deceased, and all other persons unknown claiming any in- terest in or lien or incumbrance up- on the property described in the complaint, Defendants. The State of North Dakota to the Above Named Defendants: You and each of you are hereby summoned and required to answer the complaint of the plaintiff in this ac- tion, the origina! of which is on file in the office of the Clerk of District Court, Burleigh county, North Dakota, and to serve a copy,of your answer upon the subscriber at his office in the city of Bismarck, Burleigh county, North Dakota, within thirty days after | the service of this summons upon} you, exclusive of the day of such so to do, judgment will be taken against you by default for the relief demanded in the complaint. Dated this 10th day of July, 1917. F. E. MeCURDY, Attorney for the Plaintiffs. Residence and postoffice address, Bismarck, North Dakota. To the Above Named Defendants: You will please take notice that the above entitled action is brought for the purpose of quieting title to that land described as the west 100 feet | of lots (5) amd (6), block (8), North- ern Pacific First addition to the city of Bismarck, Burleigh county, North Dakota, and you are hereby further Georgiana |\ NOTICE OF MORTGAGE FORE- CLOSURE SALE BY, ADVERTISE- MENT. The notice Is hereby given that that certain mortgage, made, execut- ed and delivered by Simon ‘Harris, a widower, mortgagor, to Alonzo Thompson, mortgagee, dated the 7th day of November, 1908, and filed for record in the office of the Register of Deeds of the County of Eurleigh and State of North Nakota, on the 17th day of November, 1908, and re- corded in book 27 of mortgages, at page 288, and assigned by the execu~ tor of «the éstate of said Alonzo Thompson, deceased, to Hattie! I. Lind- ley, which assignment is, recorded in book 33 of mortgages, at page 369, will be foreclosed by a sale of the premises in such mortgage and here- inafter described, at the front door of the Court House, in the County of Burleigh and State of North Dakota, at the hour of 10 o’ciock, a. m., on the 11th day of August, 1917, to sat- isfy, the amount due upon such mort- gage on the day of sale. The premises described in said mortgage, and which will be sold to satisfy the same, are described as follows: The North Half (N 1-2) of the Northeast Quarter (NE 1-4) of tha Northeast Quarter (NE 1-4), ana the Northeast Quarter (NE 1-4) of the Northwest Quarter (NW 1-4) of the Northeast Quarten (NE/-1+4), and they Southeast Quarter .(SIj,1-4) , ofthe Northeast Quarter (NE 1-4) of the Northeast Quarter (NE 1-4) of Sec- tion Twenty-nine (29), Township One Hundree and Thirty-nine (139), Range Eighty ($0), West of the Sth P. M., Burleigh County, North Dakota. There will be due on such mort- gage at the date of sale the sum of One Thousand Two Hundred Fifty- eight Dollars and Seventy-one cents ($1,258.71), besides costs and attor- ney's fees. Dated this 30th day of June, A. D. 1917. Lt HATTID LadaANDLRY 00> Assignee, of Mortgage. Ot THEODORE, KOFFEL,. inn — Attorney For Assignee of Mort: gagee, Bismarck, North Dakota. (7—5, 12, 19, 26; 8—2, 9) NOTICE TO CREDITORS OF THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE COMPANY. TAKE NOTICE, That on the Ist day of August, A. D. 1917, at 10 o'clock A. M., at the court house in the City of Bismarck, Burleigh County, North Dakota, the matter of the application of C. B Little, Receiver of the Bis- marck Tribune Company, a corpora- tion, for a confirmation by the Court of said Receiver’s report of distribu- tion of the assets of, said,corporation, which, is"on file in the office of -the clerk of the District Court of Bur- leigh County, at Bismarck, North Da- kota, and for a discharge of said Re- ceiver, and the release of his sure- ties from further liability on the Re- ceiver’s bond heretofore filed, will come on before the court, and at said time and place the Court will hear and determine any and all objections to such confirmation and discharge that may be presented by parties in- terested in said action or other per- sons entitled to object thereto. C. B. LITTLE, Receiver of the Bismarck Tribune Company, a corporation. MILLER, ZUGER & TILLOTSON,, Attorneys for said Receiver, nN. Aim to Be Sincere. To be sincere should be the aim of poet, painter, author, teacher, minis- - ter, the daily workman or the draft horse or milch cow of the family. One will not, if sincere, commercialize his gifts or his culture; he will not pander to the lower appetites of the masses or the whims of the rich, For one should be sincere in his entire being, in his faiths and ‘in his.doubts, if he them, in his optimism and in his pessimism.—Exchange. ha: Distinguishing Character. Nor it it always in the most distin- guished achievements that men’s vir- tues or vices may be best discerned; but very often an action of small note, a sh aying, or a jest, shall distin- guish 2 person’s real character more than the greatest sieges or the most important battles.—Plutarch. BIDS FOR BOILER. Sealed bids for furnishing and in. | stalling one 42x12 Return Tubular Steam Boiler, containing 34 3-inch tubes, 12 ft. long (did to include re- moval of old boiler from building) will be received by the Clerk of Board of Education until August Ist. Speci- notified that no personal claim is claimed against the above named de- fendants or any of them. F. E. McCURDY, Attorney for the Plaintiffs. Residénce and postoffice address, Bismarck,| | North Dakota. 7-13-6t fications on file with clerk. Right re- served to reject any or all bids. By order of Board of Education. RICHARD PENWARDEN, ~~ 7-18-13t Clerk. Tribune want ads bring results.

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